The Press

No conviction for Coast’s ‘green fairy’

- Joanne Carroll joanne.carroll@stuff.co.nz

A West Coast man has been discharged without conviction for supplying medicinal cannabis to thousands of sick people.

John Robert Patrick was elated after his appearance in the Greymouth District Court on Friday. He is known as a ‘‘green fairy’’, a term used to describe cannabis growers and suppliers who network to help patients on compassion­ate grounds.

Judge Jane Farish said she would discharge Patrick without conviction and wished him well to become a registered supplier of medicinal cannabis.

Patrick was charged with cultivatin­g cannabis, producing cannabis, possession of cannabis and a representa­tive charge of supplying cannabis.

The police summary of facts says Patrick went to the Greymouth Post Shop and posted two packages on July 2017.

The packages contained three 50-gram tubs of a balm made with cannabis and coconut oil.

Post Shop staff noticed the distinct smell of cannabis emanating from the packages and contacted police.

Patrick posted four more packages on August 8, 2017.

All of the packages were

seized by police, who then searched Patrick’s Barrytown home in October 2017 and found 931g of dried cannabis, 53 plants and 14 tubs of cannabis balm.

Patrick showed police a cupboard in his bedroom where he kept ‘‘mother plants and clones’’, and a room that was dedicated to growing cannabis.

‘‘The defendant stated that he had used alcohol and drugs a lot in his younger days but in 1994 became sober and trained as a drug and alcohol counsellor. After struggling with pain from a broken back he researched into the use of marijuana and started using it for pain relief,’’ the summary of facts says.

‘‘He felt the need to help other people as cannabis had helped him. He has been productive at this level for about two years and is doing it to help people as he believes it is his purpose in life.’’

Some of the plants found had low THC content. Others had high THC content and were used for cancer sufferers.

‘‘He doesn’t sell it but does accept a koha, which pays for the power and for the plant food.

‘‘He believes it is God’s will because of the way it balances out and it all works out,’’ the summary says.

He told police patients rubbed the balm on their skin or took it as a suppositor­y. It was useful for treating arthritis and did not make people high.

Patrick said he was relieved about the outcome.

 ??  ?? John Patrick
John Patrick

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